I’m still here. We just went to visit the University of Alabama for Capstone Scholars Day this weekend. I didn’t scroll up, so I don’t know if I posted this, but she ended up with a 1480 SAT, and her counselor told the other students to check out her common app essay about gratitude (for a simple act of kindness and inclusion) for an example of what they should aim for.
Results so far:
Alabama: Guaranteed merit of $28K, admitted to Honors, and has an interview for Blount Scholars next weekend. If she gets that, I think this is likely what she will pick. She has a pot of money in her 529 and wants to save as much of it as possible in case she goes the PsyD route rather than PhD.
Denver: received Chancellor’s Scholarship of $33K plus $3K. She loves this school so much, but is a little concerned about the ratio of grad students to undergrad. Since she’s trying to save on undergrad costs, this may go on the short list for grad school.
TCU: Received the Dean’s Scholarship at $27K. I don’t think we have a strong shot at Chancellor’s, but they changed how it’s done this year so maybe we will find out soon. It seems that TCU, though the chart they provide is simple UW core gpa-based, when they award, it seems that they do bump up based on rigor, in our experience.
Baylor: admitted to honors and University Scholars, the most selective major, where you can design your own interdisciplinary major and you can skip general education requirements. Waiting for merit award and she was invited to participate in their Invitation to Excellence scholarship event. This will probably make our target, and may be a teensy bit better fit from my view, but she keeps going back to: Is it $XX better than Bama? And I have to concede it probably isn’t.
Texas Tech: in state and received the automatic merit, and their honors program is a true gem, but it comes in about the same cost as Alabama, and Tuscaloosa > Lubbock, per D.
Elon: probably her first choice, but no merit so
Love the school that loves you back, right?